VOORHEES, N.J. — Craig Berube reiterated Friday that he will be preparing not one, but two, goaltenders for the postseason.

Uh-oh?

Is it 2010 again, when Peter Laviolette seemed to change goalies about every other shift in a failed Stanley Cup Finals series against the Blackhawks?

Does that mean Steve Mason can expect the treatment Sergei Bobrovsky did in 2011, when he was named the postseason starter, only to be replaced by Brian Boucher seven shots into Game 2 against Buffalo?

“Listen, we have lots of games — lots of games — coming up,” Berube said after practice at the Skate Zone. “We need both of our goalies. That’s it. That’s the way I look at it. I’ve told you guys that for a while now. We need both of them.”

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The Flyers will need one, at least, in Boston Saturday afternoon at 1. That will be Ray Emery, who shut out the Blues in St. Louis Wednesday, at least through regulation and overtime, before the Flyers would lose, 1-0, in a shootout.

The appointment of Emery was notable for two reasons. The first was that Mason was solid and often excellent last Sunday when the Flyers gained a standings point in a 4-3 shootout loss to the visiting Bruins. And Mason was named the game’s No. 3 star Thursday, when he was slightly out-tended by Bobrovsky in a 2-0 loss at home against the Columbus Blue Jackets.

Every nuance at practice Friday was that Emery, not Mason, would play in Boston. Upon being so tipped of that broken code, Berube smiled and acknowledged that Emery would start Saturday. Why? “It’s his turn,” he said, in something of homage to Hall of Famer Fred Shero, who once used that classic rationale for resting Bernie Parent in favor of the seldom-used Bobby Taylor.

Emery has had 19 turns to start, while Mason has had 57. Nor has Berube ever wavered, insisting all season that Mason is his No. 1 goalie and that Emery was not. But with six games to go, and with the Flyers having lost five of their last six (gaining the one-point overtime bonus in two), Berube Friday was not even ready to commit to starting Mason against the Buffalo Sabres Sunday night at the Wells Fargo Center.

“I’m not sure yet,” he said.

While the Flyers are sputtering, though not yet close to collapsing, one thing Berube did seem certain of was that his team had “lots and lots” of games to play. So he is preparing for the playoffs. And that preparation includes the readying of Emery.

For now, that’s all it is: Preparation.

“Mase (Mason) is the guy,” Emery said. “I’m sure it is just a matter of Mase feeling great going into the playoffs, and where the team is, what the standing show.”

The standings show the Flyers dipping dangerously behind the second-place Rangers in the Metro, but are not so alarming that panic has begun in the goaltending rotation or anyplace else. All Berube is indicating is that Emery is his goalie for a difficult test against the Bruins Saturday. That’s all. Just that.

“He’s done a great job,” Berube said. “He is another veteran, great guy who has been around. He’s won. He knows how to get things done.”

And that would be in a one-goalie system or in — Flyers fans might shudder at the reference — the two-ply variety.